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There’s nothing quite as frightening as the unknown. These words of former US Secretary of Defense Donald Rumsfeld should be truly terrifying (although the general consensus at the time was that they sounded like nonsense).

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The ratio of the browser window is just one example of a known unknown on the web. The simplest way to deal with this situation is to use flexible units for layout: percentages rather than pixels. Instead, designers chose to pretend that the browser dimensions were a known known. They created fixed width layouts for one specific window size.

  1. The option to use percentages instead of pixels has been with us since the days of TABLE layouts.
  2. Flexible images. Research carried out by Richard Rutter showed that browsers were becoming increasingly adept at resizing images. The intrinsic dimensions of an image need not be a limiting factor.
  3. Media queries. Thanks to the error-handling model of CSS, browsers had been adding feature upon feature over time.

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04 Comments

  • avatar

    Kendy

    July 6, 2017

    Design works within constraints. The Columban monks who crafted the Book

    • avatar

      Kendy

      July 6, 2017

      Design works within constraints. The Columban monks who crafted the Book

  • avatar

    Kendy

    July 6, 2017

    Design works within constraints. The Columban monks who crafted the Book

  • avatar

    Kendy

    July 6, 2017

    Design works within constraints. The Columban monks who crafted the Book

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